Some new toys may offer a hint about some Rogue One: A Star Wars Story ships.

A note on the film’s tone from an unlikely source.

Ben Mendelsohn sits down for a very entertaining interview.

Sound supervisor Matthew Wood talks Rogue One.

A very cool fan-made poster.

If you really want to stay on top of story details for any major movie, you can’t just pick apart a trailer or wait for someone to publish a scoop of some kind. What you really need to do is look at the film’s merchandise, which tends to spoil story points from upcoming releases time and time again. It’s always the leaky part of the blockbuster ship. In this case, it’s an upcoming Rogue One: A Star Wars Story book, which was discovered and picked apart by Jedibibliothek and BookManager.com. They even had preview images from the book before they swiftly vanished. However, one interesting detail (via Making Star Wars) remains online. It’s the most minor of minor spoilers, but consider this your warning.

Still here? Okay, it seems that there is a very important planet in Rogue One, a “secluded world” known as Scarif. More importantly, it seems that “huge tracts of land were excavated to build ships and supply the Death Star.” The planet is also protected by shields, so any kind of rebel invasion is going to be tricky. In short: the Death Star is seemingly being constructed near Scarif, which has been ravaged by the Empire to supply their monstrous battle station. I think we can safely assume that Jyn Erso and her crew will be paying this planet a visit, probably in a “U-Wing” ship (previously glimpsed in concept art) piloted by Bodhi Rook. Man, how nice is it that we actually have character names now?

While we’re on the subject of toys giving away details, a listing for new Star Wars Hot Wheels toys on Entertainment Earth unveiled a few tiny morsels of infuriation for interested parties. They seem to have updated it to remove at least one interesting tidbit, but the internet is forever and you can check out the original version over here. It’s not entirely clear if these are Rogue One products, but considering the timing, it would certainly make sense. Anyway, the original listing refers to a spaceship called The Raven, an orange Snowspeeder, and a Mon Calamari Cruiser, so make of that what you will. The Raven certainly sounds like a good name for a hero ship (or even a ship owned by a villain) and the other two ships are recognizable without being overused, which makes them solid contenders to show up once again.

Why don’t we keep the merchandise discussion going? Deadline caught up with Marty Brochstein of the International Licensing Industry Merchandisers’ Association, who was understandably pleased by the $700 million in retail sales that Star Wars: The Force Awakens generated in 2015. However, he notes that everyone expects 2016 won’t be quite as big and his reasoning is very interesting:

The natural order of things is that the second year won’t be as big as the first. You have a very different story this year with Rogue One: A Star Wars Story. It’s for an older audience than The Force Awakens. And by nature those don’t draw as much licensing business…..It would be the natural way if things weren’t quite at the level they were in 2015.

Everyone has been wondering about the tone of Rogue One (especially since those reshoots were revealed), but if the folks at the toy companies are prepared for a film that will cater to older audiences, that could be a strong indication that the original war movie angle is very much intact.